Bryan Cranston had a run-in with the law long before he slipped into Walter White’s shoes.

As the “Breaking Bad” actor recalled on “The Tonight Show” Wednesday, he and his brother were once suspected of murdering their former co-worker.

“We took a two-year motorcycle ride across the United States in the mid-’70s. We picked up jobs here and there, and one time we were in Daytona Beach, staying for awhile and trying to earn some money, and we got a job at a Polynesian restaurant called the Hawaiian Inn,” the 60-year-old explained.

“We were waiters and the head chef was a guy named Peter Wong. Now Peter was a good chef, but a horrible person.”

Wong was despised by the wait staff, especially Cranston, and the “Life in Parts” author recounted meetings in which he and fellow employees would imagine ways to ax the chef.

“I said, I’m just thinking I would slice him, not dice him up, nice tender slices,” he joked.

Once the season came to an end, Cranston and his brother hopped back on their bikes and left Florida — and Wong — in the dust. Or so they thought. Sometime afterward, the chef was killed.

“Policemen came into the Hawaiian Inn and gather everybody who’s left of the staff and they say, ‘We’d like to ask you about Peter Wong. Anybody ever talk about hurting or killing Peter Wong?’ And all of the waiters are like, ‘Yeah, all of us,'” he said.

After the authorities pressed the remaining staff about former employees issuing similar sentiments, the Cranstons’ names came up, which fit the timeline of Wong’s murder.

“They were looking for us. They put an APB [all-points bulletin] out on our motorcycles and looking for us, and we were somewhere north of the Carolinas by then,” Cranston said.

Cranston’s latest confession comes days after he opened up about his father’s abandonment and mother’s struggles with alcoholism.